MORRISON – The City Council will have turnover in half of its seats regardless of Tuesday's election results.

That's because four council incumbents are not seeking re-election: Ward 1’s Guy Hayenga, 77; Ward 3’s Pat Zuidema, 73; Ward 4’s David Rose; and Sarah Thorndike, in Ward 2, who is running for mayor.

Four council seats, including Marti Wood’s Ward 3 post, will be on the ballot in 2015. If she is elected mayor in April, a successor will be named to complete her council term.

In Wards 1, 2 and 3, two people are vying for each seat. In Ward 1, Dale Eizenga, 64, and Cheryl Bush, 50, are competing for votes. Nancy Riggen, 56, and Harvey Zuidema, 73, are facing off in Ward 2. And Curt Bender and Vernon Tervelt are opposing each other in Ward 3.

What has encouraged them to run?

All but Bush said streets are a major concern in the city. More than 80 percent of the city’s roads are cracking and getting to the “alligator skin” stage, where the cracks interlock, City Administrator Jim Wise said in January.

In February, Wise told council members the city needs $7 million for street repairs that it does not have.

"The people of Morrison would like repaving," Zuidema said. "A lot of people complained about the sealcoat job in 2008 or so. [Streets are] kind of just deteriorating."

Main Street, which is used for the annual Paint the Town event, is one street that needs repairs, Bender said.

"They are awful," Riggen said of the streets.

But the city's handling of its money is also a concern, several candidates said.

Riggen said it seems that the city is "going a little crazy hiring [full-time] people" when the economy is rough, and the sports complex is going to have to support itself at some point. The complex would have generated more revenue year round if it had been built to accommodate more than baseball, she said.

The sports complex is costing the city of Morrison a substantial amount of money, Tervelt said, adding that the city must support it, though, because it's a "great asset."

The city is paying $190,000 a year from its utility tax to pay off a $2 million bond for the complex. That bond will be paid off in 2021.

The city must generate income from concessions and the hosting of sporting events, Tervelt said.

A need for more revenue is the biggest problem facing Morrison, and the city must be creative to solve it, Bender said. He suggested that the city consider TIF districts and possibly annexing outlying subdivisions.

Zuidema believes that the city would benefit financially from employees of Thomson Correctional Center moving to the city, if the prison opens, he said.

Bender is vice president and survey manager for Willett, Hofmann & Associates, a Dixon-based engineering firm.

He said he couldn't understand why estimates for the new wastewater treatment plant have been as high as they have been, recently reaching $21 million for a site south of Waterworks Park.

"I'm having a real hard time as a taxpayer wrapping my head around this cost," he said. "What is this going to cost the user? We haven't got an answer, but we're probably looking at $160 to $170 a month for water and sewer rates combined."

Bush said one major problem facing the city is the decision of where to put the new plant.

"I just want it to be in the best location where it fits for everybody, the best place," she said.

Riggen, Zuidema, Bender and Tervelt all said they would support allowing bars to sell liquor on Sundays, with some of them saying the change would bring in revenue for the city. Bush declined to comment on the issue.

Ward 4’s Alderman Scott Connelly, 40, is the only incumbent running. He was appointed to serve through the election after Ron Kallemeyn resigned in August. Connelly will serve the 2 years remaining in Kallemeyn’s term.

Experience: Artillery land surveyor for the Army, 1976-1979; working for land surveying firms since 1979, received a professional surveyor's license in 2007

Government experience: Served on planning and zoning board for the city of Morrison for about a year; served on ad hoc committee for leaf burning for the city in 2012

Nancy Riggen

Age: 56

Family: Children, Michelle Bos, 23, Bill Bos, 19, both of Morrison

Education: Morrison High School, 1975; attended Sauk Valley Community College, 1996-97 and 1995-96; attended American Institute of Commerce business school for court reporting, Davenport, Iowa, in early 1980s

Experience: Administrative assistant to the Whiteside County sheriff for past 22 years